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a/an + uncountable noun + that (relative clause)

I searched the Corpus of American English for the structure of 'a/an + uncountable noun + that (relatve clause)' to learn how to use these uncountable nouns. And I got the results as follows. Could I ask native English speakers to point out which are good English, which are acceptable and which are incorrect:

an access that 3;
an admiration that 2;
an agriculture that 3;
an anger that 13;
a blood that 2;
a chemistry that 6;
a corn that 2;
a countryside that;
a courage that 1;
a cruelty that 3;
a dampness that 3;
a dawn that 6;
a dependence that 3;
a diabetes that 1;
a dusk that 1;
an ease that 22;
an electricity that 3;
an English that 3;
an envy that 3;
a fame that 4
a flu that 5;
a future that 179;
a harm that 1;
a housing that 1;
a hunger that 9;
an importance that 11;
an information that 2;
a knowledge that 40;
a machinery that;
a midnight that 1;
a money that 1;
a music that 35;
a past that 116;
a patience that 4;
a physics that 1;
a politics that 35;
a poverty that 4 ;
a privacy that 2;
a progress that 2;
a public that 91;
a respect that 7;
a rice that 4;
a shelter that 16;
a sunshine that 1;
a traffic that 1;
a vitality that 9;
a water that 1;
a wealth that 2

Re: a/an + uncountable noun + that (relative clause)

Originally Posted by Luizao

apart from the nouns that are uncountable I can't see much wrong with any of them...

I mean; "a traffic that" - you just lose the "a" as it's an uncountable noun

Hi, Luizao. Thanks for your reply. The usage of uncountable nouns has been a great difficulty for Chinese learners of English. My MacMillan, Longman, Oxford and Cambridge advanced learner's dictionaries, and my PRACTICAL ENGLISH USAGE by Michael Swan, LONGMAN ENGLISH GRAMMAR by L.G. Alexander all say that music, diabetes, rice, courage, music etc are uncountable nouns and you cannot use 'a' before them or the plural of them. I had no doubt of this until one day I read 'a countryside that' and 'a music that'. So I searched the corpura and got the results. Does this show that what dictionaries and grammar books say differs from the actual use of them?